"Crazy Love"

Sunday Sermon: 10/6/2024

Crazy Love.  Join Transformation Community Church for this week’s inspirational and encouraging word of the LORD: “Crazy Love” We hope this message will bless you in your walk with God and Jesus Christ. Many blessings!

Crazy Love

As most of you know I have 3 grandchildren; Gavin is in the sixth grade now. Kendyll is 5 years old, and Bella is 3 years old. As they grow older, I catch myself doing something that my mom used to do. I become overwhelmed with joy. Have you ever just looked at someone you love and felt the emotion swell up inside you? You wanted in some way to let them know how you felt, but when you did it just seemed too mushy for words. It happens to me with my grandkids, and when I try to tell them they just wind up thinking I’m weird. Some time back Gavin was busy playing an electronic game and I felt a little mushy. I called him over and he refused to come. After coaxing, pleading, and finally demanding he walked over to me, and I gave him a hug and told him that I loved him. He rolled his eyes and said, “Yeah, I know that!” like, “Why in the world did you disturb me just for that?”

So how do you convey the depths of parental love to an 11-year-old who hasn’t learned to tell the difference between love for family and love for a PlayStation 5? Is it possible for a child to comprehend the depth and breadth of their parent’s love? And even if they can’t understand it, should that stop us from expressing that love? Is our love any less just because they don’t get it?

Throughout the Bible, God expressed His love for His children in a million different ways. He created a luscious garden to live in, and He provided manna and quail in the wilderness. He gave a land to live in and He provided crops to sustain them. And in an act that defies the comprehension of our feeble little minds, He sent His Son to the world. A baby in a manger and a man on a cross are two images that can’t help but make us wonder. “What kind of love is this that God has for us?” I have come to the conclusion that it’s bigger than I can comprehend.

That’s why Paul asked the questions that close the eighth chapter of Romans. Because when we hear about God’s love, there really are some questions that come to our minds. With a series of five questions, Paul challenges anybody and everybody, in heaven, on earth, or even in hell itself to deny the depths of God’s love.

Romans 8:31-39 (NLT)

Did you notice the questions? My guess is that you’ve probably asked them a time or two yourself. You see, Paul could have made bold, far-reaching statements about the incredible commitment of God to His children. Instead, he wants the answers to these questions on our lips.

“If God is for us, who can be against us?” Now understand, Paul could have asked the question “Who can be against us?” and the answers would have been numerous. Every person who lives faces opposition. There is disease, disappointment, and difficult circumstances which all serve as opponents to our good pleasure. But the truth of the matter is, that is not the question Paul asked. His statement is “If God is for us, who can be against us?” And that is a different question entirely.

Now Paul has spent a long time explaining one fact, and by now he expects you to realize it. God is for us. Just in this 8th chapter, he has shown you how much God is for you. He has told you that there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. He has pointed out that God has given you a part of Himself to walk with you every step of the way. He has highlighted the fact that for Christians there is an overflowing abundance of hope. If we haven’t caught onto God’s love by now, it’s not because Paul hasn’t explained it. God has crazy love for you!

So tell me, with that in mind, who can be against you? When things pile up against you, how do they stack up? Not how do they stack up to you! How do they stack up to God? Are you afraid that God can’t handle the difficulties in your life? If you are, then you don’t understand God. He is the one who called the universe into being. He created every star in the sky. He created the sea life, wild life, birds, and insects. He engineered the universe to operate in perfect synchronization. Are you afraid that He can’t handle your problems? Surely not when you really think about it. I suspect there might be another fear.

You see, maybe it’s not that we are afraid God can’t handle the difficulties of our life. It’s just that sometimes we wonder if God will handle them. I mean you have to wonder if He’s got the time to deal with my “minute” or “insignificant” problems. That’s why Paul asks the next question. “He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all–how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?”

Suppose a man comes upon a child being beaten up by thugs. He jumps into the middle of the bunch, rescues the boy and takes him to the hospital. The young boy is nursed back to health and the man pays the bill. He learns that the child is an orphan, so he adopts him as his own and gives the boy his name. And then, one night, months later, the father hears the son sobbing into his pillow. He goes to him and asks what is wrong. Through his tears the boy says “I’m worried, daddy. I’m worried about tomorrow. Where will I get food to eat? How will I get cloths to stay warm? Where will I sleep?”

As you can imagine, the father is disturbed. “Haven’t I shown you? Don’t you understand? I risked my life to save you. I gave my money to treat you. I gave you my name and called you my son. Would I do all that and not meet all your needs?
That is exactly Paul’s question. Would God go to all the pain and trouble to send His Son to die for you and then just forget about you in your hour of need? No way, not even a little bit! Paul reminds us that God has way too much invested in us to forget about us now. What kind of father would forget about His child? Certainly not the perfect one who created us!
But even if we realize that God’s love is such for us that He won’t forget about us, then we are confronted with another thought. If God never forgets about us, then He also doesn’t miss what we do. And we realize that we have done some things that must not have made God very happy. So, Paul brings up the next two questions.

“Who dares accuse us whom God has chosen for his own? No one—for God himself has given us right standing with himself. Who then will condemn us? ” You’ve heard those words of condemnation just like I have. “There’s no way God could love you, you are too dirty!” And the guilt that should drive us back into the arms of our loving father, sometimes keeps us pushing away. Where do those words of condemnation come from?

They cannot come from God. God says “There is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” Those words come from one who doesn’t want us in the arms of our father. Revelation 12:10 tells us that there is one who stands before God day and night accusing Christians of sin. He is the one whose name means “accuser.” We call him Satan.

Revelation 12:10 (NKJV)

Then I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, “Now salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of His Christ have come, for the accuser of our brethren, who accused them before our God day and night, has been cast down.

Some time back I heard a story about a little boy who got a new slingshot and went out to try it out. While he was trying it out, he took aim on grandma’s pet cat, and to his surprise he hit it and killed it. As you can imagine, the boy was horrified, so he took the cat and hid it in the woodpile. Just as he finished covering it up, he noticed that his sister Janice was watching.

After lunch that day, Grandma told Janice to help with the dishes. Janice responded, “Johnny told me he wanted to to the dishes today. Didn’t you Johnny?” She leaned over and whispered, “Remember the cat.” Johnny on dishes.

The next several weeks were Johnny’s worst nightmare. It seemed like he was always at the sink, sometimes for his duty, sometimes for his sin. Whenever he would almost get completely fed up with it, Janice would remind him “Remember the cat.”
Finally, Johnny got fed up. So, he confessed about the cat.

Grandma was understanding. “I know you killed the cat. I was standing at the window watching the whole thing. Because I love you, I forgave you. I just wondered how long you would let Janice make a slave out of you.” Johnny had been pardoned, but he continued to feel guilty because he listened to the words of his accuser.

How many times have we listened to Satan’s accusations, all the while forgetting that God knows our sin, and has pardoned us anyway. Jesus is sitting at God’s right hand right now, and He is standing up for us. He is asking God to forgive us for our sin. And as the accusations fly, God looks to His Son, and Jesus says, “I will take the penalty for that sin.” And the blood of Christ covers over your guilt if you are a member of His family.

I want you to take a look at the last question. There is one more question, but it is in response to this one. And believe me, this is the big one. Anyone who has been a Christian for very long has asked this one. “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?” As a sort of answer to that question, Jesus told a story in Luke 15 about a father who had 2 sons.

One asked his father for his inheritance and headed off to live it up. But the boy found out that life wasn’t all it was cracked up to be. It wasn’t long until he was hanging with pigs, and he realized he could live better as his father’s slave than on his own.

What questions do you think were on his mind as he decided to go back to his father? I’ll bet this one was at the top of the list. He must have asked himself, “What could separate me from the love of my father?” But he wasn’t sure when he returned. He spent the entire return trip trying to figure out what to say to convince His father to let him return home, even as a slave.

An amazing thing happened. Jesus says that while the son was a long way off, the father saw him coming down the street.

Pops was watching for his lost son. And instead of waiting on the porch, Pops lifted up his robe and ran to meet and greet his boy. He threw a party, and he wouldn’t even let the boy finish the apology he had worked so long on.

 

You see, what the son failed to realize was that the only thing that could separate him from his father’s love was his own choice to ignore it. The same is true for you and me. It is not any circumstances, or difficulty. No painful trial or sin will ever keep us from experiencing the loving embrace of our Heavenly Father. The only thing that can keep us out of His waiting arms is if we push him away.

The love of God says that you can live without condemnation. The love of God provides you with a companion to be with you in the worst of times and the best of times. The love of God gives you hope. The love of God makes sure that you are plugged into His purpose for your life. And the love of God means that you can live without fear of ever being separated from His love. But in the end, you must choose. Will you be the prodigal? Will you swallow your pride and come to your loving father who is watching for your return? You see, the only thing that can keep you from experiencing God’s crazy love for you IS you!

A “Choked” Life

Luke 8:4-8 (NLT)

In the familiar parable of the sower, we see that even Jesus saw people respond superficially to His message. The problem was certainly not in His preaching, but in the audience’s hearing. The warning to those who hear the parable, of course, is to take it to heart so that we avoid a superficial faith. Whatever the current state of our hearts, we can appeal to God to grant us a new heart so that we will hold fast to Him and bear fruit with perseverance.

In the parable of Luke 8:4-15, Jesus likens the soils or grounds of a field to the different kind of people on this earth. Everybody falls into at least one of these four grounds. If you don’t like “your soil”, just know that the kinds of soils are not fixed forever. By God’s grace, a person can change. (can I get a amen)

The four soils can be grouped into two categories: the unfruitful and the fruitful. All four soils hear the Word. The first soil is the only one not to accept it at all. The second soil accepts the seed briefly and shows initial promise, but it soon dies out. The third soil seems to make even further progress, but eventually the thorns choke it out. Only the fourth soil eventually bears fruit.

Release the Choke Hold

Luke 8:7 (NLT)

Other seed fell among thorns that grew up with it and choked out the tender plants.

One type of weed looked very much like wheat as it grew, but it had larger roots and took away the moisture and nutrients that the wheat needed

Looked like something that it wasn’t

Gave you a false sense of security

Health – we are headed toward death

Wealth – we are all one bad decision or accident away from being financially challenged

Relationships – people make mistakes and loved ones fail us… who are you trying to please

Productivity and Work – we find a false sense of security in our title or completing our to-do-list

But in the end, it robbed and drained you

True security is found in the Lord

Isaiah 40:6-8 (NIV)

A voice says, “Cry out.”

And I said, “What shall I cry?”

“All people are like grass, and all their faithfulness is like the flowers of the field.

7 The grass withers and the flowers fall, because the breath of the Lord blows on them. Surely the people are grass. 8 The grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of our God endures forever.”

“The word of God will stand forever.” Jesus Christ, the Word of God, will reign for all eternity. He is the beginning and the end, and he is ruler over all creation, including your life, whether you realize it or not. Christ is the everlasting joy of mankind, the joy of our salvation and our true stronghold. And we can trust him, rely on him, and find our security in him because he did not spare even his own life for our sake, but gave himself up as a ransom for many.

Mark 4:18-19 (NLT)

The seed that fell among the thorns represents others who hear God’s word, 19 but all too quickly the message is crowded out by the worries of this life, the lure of wealth, and the desire for other things, so no fruit is produced.
They hear, but the word doesn’t even take root… why?

Stresses of Life

Worries

Wounds

Weariness

Depression

Fear

Anxiety

Money

Some of us are so overwhelmed so much so that the word of God (Jesus) doesn’t have an entry for the word of God (seeds) to take root.

1 Peter 5:7 (NLT)

Give all your worries and cares to God, for he cares about you. Riches and Pleasures of Life Some of us love to sin; makes us feel good Lust after a noun (person, place or thing) Pride of life; can’t nobody tell you nothing Living Your Best Life

Become unfruitful

No good tree produces bad fruit; No bad tree produces good fruit; Only a good tree can produce good fruit. You have to have the Word in you to be a good tree.

1 John 2:15-17 (NIV)

Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, love for the Father is not in them. 16 For everything in the world—the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life—comes not from the Father but from the world. 17 The world and its desires pass away, but whoever does the will of God lives forever.

Isaiah 43:1-4 (NLT)

But now, O Jacob, listen to the Lord who created you. O Israel, the one who formed you says, “Do not be afraid, for I have ransomed you. I have called you by name; you are mine. 2 When you go through deep waters, I will be with you. When you go through rivers of difficulty, you will not drown. When you walk through the fire of oppression, you will not be burned up; the flames will not consume you. 3 For I am the Lord, your God, the Holy One of Israel, your Savior. I gave Egypt as a ransom for your freedom; I gave Ethiopia and Seba in your place. 4 Others were given in exchange for you. I traded their lives for yours because you are precious to me. You are honored, and I love you.

You are not choked out

As long as the Lord has given you breadth; you have another chance, another opportunity

Jesus died on the cross to defeat death

He died so that we can have eternal life

He died so that we can be restored to Him

Jesus is the breadth of life that can make all things new